Online Encyclopedia

MARTIN V

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 793 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MARTIN V  . (
See also:
Otto Colonna) (1417—1431) was elected at
See also:
Con-stance on St Martin's Day, in a conclave composed of twenty-three cardinals and
See also:
thirty delegates from the five different " nations " of the council . Son of Agapito Colonna, who had himself become a bishop and cardinal, the new pope belonged to one of the greatest
See also:
Roman families; to Urban VI. had been due his entry, as ref erendarius, upon an ecclesiastical career . Having become a cardinal under Innocent VII., he had seceded from Gregory XII. in 1408, and together with the other cardinals at Pisa, had taken
See also:
part in the election of Alexander V. and afterwards of John
See also:
XXIII . At Constance, his role had been chiefly that of an arbiter; he was a good and gentle man, leading a
See also:
simple
See also:
life,
See also:
free from intrigue . While refraining from making any pronouncement as to the validity of the decrees of the
See also:
fourth and fifth sessions, which had seemed to proclaim the superiority of the council over the pope, Martin V. nevertheless soon revealed his
See also:
personal feelings by having a constitution read in consistory which forbade any
See also:
appeal from the
See also:
judgment of the
See also:
sovereign pontiff in matters of faith (May 1o, 1418) . As to the reform, of which everybody felt the necessity, the fathers in council had not succeeded in arriving at any agreement . Martin V. himself settled a
See also:
great number of points, and then passed a series of
See also:
special concordats with Germany, France, Italy, Spain and England . Though this was not the thorough reform of which need was felt, the council itself gave the pope a satisfecit . When the council was dissolved Martin V. made it his task to regain Italy . After staying for long periods at Mantua and Florence, where the deposed pope, Baldassare Cossa (John XXIII.), came and made submission to him, Martin V. was enabled to enter Rome (
See also:
Sept . 30, 1420) and measure the extent of the ruins
See also:
left there by the Great
See also:
Schism of the West .

He set to

See also:
work to restore some of these ruins, to reconstitute and pacify the Papal State, to put an end to the Schism, which showed signs of continuing in Aragon and certain parts of
See also:
southern France; to enter into negotiations, unfortunately unfruitful, with the Greek Church also with a view to a return to unity, to organize the struggle against
See also:
heresy in Bohemia; to interpose his pacific mediation between France and England, as well as between the parties which were rending France; and, finally, to welcome and act as
See also:
patron to saintly re-formers like Bernardino of
See also:
Siena and Francesca
See also:
Romana, foundress of the
See also:
nursing sisterhood of the Oblate di Tor de' Specchi (1425) . In accordance with the decree Frequens, and the promises which he had made, Martin V., after an
See also:
interval of five years, summoned a new council, which was almost immediately transferred from Pavia to Siena, in consequence of an epidemic (1423) . But the small number of fathers who attended at the latter
See also:
town, and above all, the disquieting tendencies whicl began to make themselves felt there, induced the pope to force on a dissolution of the synod . Pending the
See also:
reunion of the new council which had been summoned at Basel for the end of a period of seven years, Martin V. himself endeavoured to effect a reformation in certain points, but he was carried off by apoplexy (Feb . 20, 1431), just as he had designated the young and brilliant Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini to preside in his place over the council of Basel . See L . Pastor, Geschichte der Papste (1901), i . 205-279; J . Guiraud, L'E°tat pontifical acres le
See also:
Grand Schisme (1896); Mintz,
See also:
Les Arts a la tour
See also:
des gapes pendant le xve et le xvie siecle (1878) ; N . Valois, La Crise religieuse du xve siecle; le pape et le concile (1909), vol. i. p. i.—xxix., 1-93 . (N .

End of Article: MARTIN V
[back]
MARTIN OF TROPPAU, or MARTIN THE POLE (d. 1278)
[next]
BON LOUIS HENRI MARTIN (1810-1883)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.